St. Louis鈥 鈥渕ost fundamental document鈥 would get a comprehensive review every decade under a proposal under consideration by the St. Louis Board of Aldermen.
by 8th Ward Alderwoman Annie Rice creates a nine-member charter commission that would meet and take public input before drafting potential amendments to present to voters. Those members would be nominated by the mayor and approved by the full board, and the commission would have a year to complete its work.
The last charter commission convened in 1949. More recent changes have been piecemeal, and that鈥檚 resulted in a document that鈥檚 become unwieldy, Rice said.
鈥淲e could do some real cohesive work here,鈥 she said of the commission. 鈥淭hey could submit charter amendments to the voters that would be more than just one-off changes.鈥
If the measure is approved by voters, people who have been city residents for at least two years and don鈥檛 have any conflicts of interest would submit an application to the mayor鈥檚 office, which would forward that list to the board. The aldermen would each select two candidates; the mayor would choose her nominees from that list.
A confirmation vote on the nominees would have to take place within 30 days. Rice said the specific deadlines are to avoid a situation that occurred , in which the mayor and the aldermen could not come to an agreement on the city鈥檚 members.
Twentieth Ward alderwoman Cara Spencer, the chair of the committee hearing the bill, said the city is facing a moment of reflection and healing.
鈥淎nd the reviewing of our city charter, the governing documents of our city, could play a very, very important role here, and I believe that it should,鈥 she said.
The committee plans to hold several public hearings on the proposal. Rice hopes to put it to voters in November. If the measure reaches the required 60% threshold for a charter change, the process to create the commission would start by Dec. 1.
Follow Rachel on Twitter: